If someone created a program that randomly puts together text according to stereotypes picked on the internet, then i'd be pretty confident to say that this program generated this book based on stereotypes on the work place. I always know that when you read these books you've to swallow a lot of bullshit to read those maybe 10 pages that are worth the book.In this case, those 10 pages never arrived- the book is anecdotal nonsense from page one to the end. The title of this book is too "in your face", it makes you feel a bit guilty about reading it, like you're committing a crime or something. But the the idea of learning how rules work and how you work around them (white hacks) is just what we all do every day, without wanting to call it a big hack or anarchy. The book is not well written, if you read what they say on the back of the book this should be enough, the rest is just the authors saying this phrase they so love one thousand times - "hack it!" actually meaning - "think about what you do before you do it" :P. It is ridiculously repetitive and not very enlightening at all.
What do You think about Hacking Work: Breaking Stupid Rules For Smart Results (2010)?
Keeping going round the same points. The book itself needs to be hacked.
—xBrownEyesBeautyx
Should be required reading for anyone in the working world.
—baany
Interesting. Simple but effective concepts.
—mlogan